Tag: Entertainment-Variety

  • ‘Yellowjackets’ Creators Ashley Lyle, Bart Nickerson Ink Paramount TV Studios Overall Deal

    ‘Yellowjackets’ Creators Ashley Lyle, Bart Nickerson Ink Paramount TV Studios Overall Deal

    Yellowjackets” co-creators Ashley Lyle and Bart Nickerson have signed an overall deal with Paramount Television Studios, Variety has learned.

    The news comes just ahead of the start of production on Season 4 of “Yellowjackets,” which was previously reported to be the show’s final outing. Lyle and Nickerson serve as executive producers and showrunners on the series in addition to co-creating it.

    “We are thrilled to expand our long-standing creative partnership with Ashley and Bart, who are singular, fearless, and groundbreaking storytellers,” said Matt Thunell, president of Paramount Television Studios. “We look forward to supporting them making many epic stories to come.”

    “Yellowjackets” originally debuted in 2021, with the third season airing between February and April 2025. The fourth season will premiere in 2026, with an exact release date to be revealed at a later time. The show has received numerous accolades, such 10 Emmy nominations to date, including consecutive nods for best drama and best actress in a drama (Melanie Lynskey).

    “We’re elated to continue our relationship with Paramount, a home that deeply and genuinely supports original, outside-the-box, narrative-driven storytelling,” said Lyle and Nickerson. “Reuniting with Matt Thunell, one of the very first executives we ever worked with, is especially meaningful to us, and we can’t wait to dig into developing our next passion projects while supporting a new generation of oddball creators through this partnership.”

    In addition to “Yellowjackets,” Lyle and Nickerson are known for their work on shows like “Dispatches From Elsewhere,” “Narcos,” “Narcos: Mexico,” and “The Originals.” They are repped by UTA, Untitled, and The Nord Group.

  • Entertainment Is a Software Industry Now and We Might as Well Get Good at It

    Entertainment Is a Software Industry Now and We Might as Well Get Good at It

    A few months ago, I sat in a room where a product manager from a prominent TV operating system explained how an algorithm had reorganized their entire home screen. No human had approved the change. A show that a studio had spent two years, and a $100 million making, was now buried three rows down, behind a row of AI-generated thumbnails tested against 12 variants in real time. The show didn’t fail. It just disappeared.

    Entertainment is a software industry now.

    The tension we feel isn’t about content volume, business models, or even consolidation. Those are simply symptoms of an industry getting eaten by software when it’s still running the old playbook.

    The cause: Every layer from production to distribution and monetization is now software. Cameras capture to hard drives. Editing happens in the cloud. Algorithms decide what viewers see, and ads are bought and sold in milliseconds by auction systems that do more daily transaction volume than a credit card company does in a year. Shows don’t compete on quality alone, but on code. A lot of this is good news: more stories from more voices, faster. But only if we acknowledge the shift and learn the new rules.

    New Rules of the Game

    Acting like a software industry means moving faster. It means building feedback loops that give the craft its best shot. Understanding audiences earlier. Testing assumptions before committing hundreds of millions of dollars. Learning what’s working while the project is still in motion, not after its release. The goal isn’t to create quick, cheap content; it’s about giving projects that creatives pour years into a real chance to land, commercially and culturally. Right now, we make huge creative bets in entertainment and hand over the outcome to algorithms that are not ours. That’s not protecting the craft. That’s gambling with it. The entertainment industry needs to invest in owning its future.

    AI is the clearest example. Used well, it’s the most powerful creative tool in a generation. Writers can test story structures. Producers can previsualize entire sequences before committing a dollar to production. And marketing teams can find the right audience before launch, not after. The studios and streamers that build these capabilities through internal investment and trusted partnerships will make better work. The ones that wait will rent these tools from the same technology companies already controlling their distribution and often bulldozing their IP.

    How Leverage Has Shifted

    In every corner of entertainment, from gaming to movies, intermediaries have inserted themselves between creators and their audiences. A handful of companies control the operating systems apps run on and unilaterally decide which apps get prominent placement, and their cut of the subscription money. They decide what data flows and to whom.

    Within streaming TV, another layer of software decides which shows get the home screen treatment and which disappear into the abyss of the infinite scroll. A streamer can invest hundreds of millions of dollars into content, build a beloved product, earn a loyal audience and still be at the mercy of whichever operating system owns the home screen.

    The streaming industry spent the last decade fighting for subscribers while operating systems quietly gained an advantage. It’s the same way tech played out: If you own the OS, you’ll capture the leverage. It happened on mobile, in search and on social. Now it’s happening in media.

    AI Raises the Stakes, Again

    Platforms now use AI to generate quick content. This is not meant to replace the shows that spark culture and conversation, but to create a new category of programming: replaceable entertainment. It’s content designed to be sufficient — good enough that most people won’t notice the difference, and cheap enough that it doesn’t matter if they do. If that layer of programming sits more prominently atop an OS or a social platform, with no visibility into how other work is surfaced or monetized beside it, what leverage do we have?

    Software and AI done right can mean more opportunities to grow and find new audiences and better tools to make great work. But that only happens if the systems are transparent. Right now, some of these systems are black boxes controlled by gatekeepers with conflicting incentives. The industry needs to come together around open tools for creation, distribution and monetization.

    The next 18 months will determine who controls the stack. The AI layer isn’t locked in yet. Neither are the platforms. There’s a window, but it won’t stay open for long.

    Here’s what we can do: 

    • Map your landlord. Know exactly which companies sit between you and your viewers. Calculate what percentage of your revenue they touch. Understand their incentives, which may not always align with your incentives.
    • Build leverage together. The open internet is not guaranteed. A healthier ecosystem is one where consumers have choices, streamers and creators can own their future, and no single gatekeeper controls all the pipes. This system won’t emerge on its own. It has to be built and defended together.
    • Demand the data. If a streaming app can’t tell you how your content was discovered, how many people saw it, and why they stopped watching, that’s not a partner. That’s a landlord who only talks to you on rent day.
    • Invest in how things are made, not just what you make. Build AI and software teams that serve the creative process. Use data to test assumptions before greenlighting projects, not just to write postmortems. Treat technology as a creative advantage, not a cost center. Enable the world’s best creatives to realize their vision faster.

    I’ve spent my career in both worlds: building products at some of the world’s largest platforms, as well as working with the studios and creators who make the media people love. I know the impact that technology can have on entertainment. I also know what happens when an industry waits for someone else to figure it out. With these learnings, we’re focused on providing creators and entertainment companies with access to a streaming ecosystem that includes the tools and systems required to keep making great content that audiences love. We’re not fighting the future of technology — we’re ensuring the people who make the work have a seat at the table when the rules get rewritten.

    If you run a studio, a streamer or a production company, this is your problem now. Not next year. Now. The window is open.

    Let’s move.

  • Mark Normand Sets Netflix Special ‘None Too Pleased’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Mark Normand Sets Netflix Special ‘None Too Pleased’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Mark Normand has set his next stand-up comedy special at Netfilx.

    Titled “None Too Pleased,” the hour will debut on the streamer on March 17. Normand filmed the special at the Boulder Theater in Boulder, Colo.

    The New Orleans-born, New York-based comic “turns married life, fatherhood and hot-button topics into rapid-fire punchlines in this witty free-for-all where nothing is off limits,” according to the logline.

    “I actually caught going to a strip club recently by my wife. I don’t know how she caught me, I only talked about it on four podcasts,” Normand quips in the trailer, before launching into some NSFW punchlines.

    “None Too Pleased” is executive produced by Jordan Levy, Rachel Helix and Turner Byfuglin and produced by Matt Schuler.

    Normand’s last special was Netflix’s “Soup to Nuts” in 2023. Prior to that, the comic self-released “Out to Lunch” on YouTube in 2020. He also had a half-hour set featured in Netflix’s “The Standups.”

    Normand hosts the podcasts “We Might Be Drunk” with Sam Morril and “Tuesdays With Stories” with Joe List. He has made 14 stand-up appearances on late-night TV, including sets on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” and “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.” Normand is also a frequent guest on “The Joe Rogan Experience” and a regular panelist on “Kill Tony.” He is currently on his “Mumbo Jumbo” tour across America.

    Normand is represented by Brillstein Entertainment Partners, UTA and Yorn Levine Barnes Krintzman Rubenstein Kohner Endlich Goodell & Gellman.

    Watch the trailer for “None Too Pleased” below.

  • BritBox to Launch ‘On the Box’ Weekly Podcast With Hosts Edith Bowman, Michelle Collins (EXCLUSIVE)

    BBC Studios-owned streamer BritBox is launching “On the Box,” a new weekly podcast hosted by BBC Radio 1’s Edith Bowman and comedian Michelle Collins.

    Premiering March 9, the BBC Studios Audio podcast will dissect “the very best of BritBox and the TV pop culture shaping screens on both sides of the Atlantic” and will feature exclusive cast interviews, behind‑the‑scenes stories and “smart, insightful commentary.”

    The early guest lineup for “On the Box” will include Emmy winner Matthew Rhys (Agatha Christie’s Towards Zero), BAFTA-winning writer Sally Wainwright (“Happy Valley,” “Riot Women”), Rosalie Craig (“Riot Women”), Mia McKenna-Bruce (“The Lady,” “Seven Dials”), and Lauren Lyle (“Karen Pirie,” “Outlander”).

    “On the Box: The BritBox Podcast” will be available on all major podcast platforms with new episodes released weekly through July 20.

    The podcast is executive produced by Alana McGaughey, Diane Robina for BritBox, and Pete Strauss for BBC Studios. Rajiv Karia is a producer.

    The “On the Box” podcast launches amid subscription growth for BritBox’s Premier tier and critical acclaim for new series “Riot Women.” Next up, BritBox will debut “The Lady,” “Ludwig” Season 2, “Blue Lights” Season 4 and adaptations of “The Other Bennet Sister” and “Agatha Christie’s Tommy & Tuppence.”

    “I am absolutely thrilled to be launching this new BritBox podcast with Michelle Collins,” Bowman said. “I have long admired her sharp wit and infectious energy, so getting to work alongside her is a real joy. We share a deep love of great television and a healthy obsession with the outrageous bits, and we cannot wait to bring listeners into the heart of the conversation. With some incredible guests joining us along the way, it is going to feel like one big brilliant team celebrating the shows we love.”

    Collins added: “As a life-long Anglophile, getting to work with BritBox and BBC Studios Audio is truly the dream come true for me. When I received the call to co-host ‘On The Box’ with the Scottish legend Edith Bowman – whose voice both soothes and delights – I immediately said yes. We get to analyze, laugh about, and obsess over all the hit British shows that are leaving audiences on the edge of their seats. What could be more fun than that?”

  • Microdrama Platforms Spend Up to 90% of Budgets on Marketing, Execs Say at Packed Mip London Panel: ‘Don’t Shun the Format, Embrace It’

    Microdrama Platforms Spend Up to 90% of Budgets on Marketing, Execs Say at Packed Mip London Panel: ‘Don’t Shun the Format, Embrace It’

    One of the marquee panels at Mip London drew a full house as executives revealed that microdrama platforms are devoting as much as 90% of their budgets to marketing rather than production, underscoring how the fast-growing short-form storytelling sector is evolving into a user-acquisition business that increasingly resembles mobile gaming.

    “Ninety percent of the budget goes to marketing,” said Timothy Oh, general manager of COL Group International, describing how companies test thousands of trailer variations across social platforms to drive downloads.

    Oh said the economics of the sector closely mirror gaming models, where success depends primarily on acquiring and retaining users rather than on production scale. “Promoting short drama is the same as promoting any games,” he said, noting that teams continuously experiment with large volumes of advertising clips to optimize performance.

    Anatolii Kasianov, co-founder and co-CEO of Holywater, said acquisition costs can reach $20 to $30 per install, forcing companies to rely heavily on data analytics and artificial intelligence to manage spending efficiently. “You need to be extremely efficient,” he said, explaining that AI tools are used to automate trailer creation and analyze marketing performance.

    The discussion, part of the “MicroDrama 2026: The Global Breakout” session, focused on the business mechanics behind the rapidly expanding format of one- to two-minute narrative episodes designed primarily for mobile viewing.

    Maria Rua Aguete, head of media and entertainment at Omdia, said the format’s growth is tied to broader shifts in viewing behavior. “Seventy-five percent of video consumption takes place on a smartphone,” she said, adding that even older audiences are increasingly watching video on mobile devices.

    She also noted that monetization relies heavily on microtransactions, with viewers often discovering microdramas through free clips on social media before paying incremental fees to unlock episodes.

    Executives said these payment structures further reinforce parallels with gaming economics, where revenue is driven by frequent small payments rather than traditional subscription models.

    At the same time, panelists said the sector is evolving beyond its early focus on low-cost romance content and is beginning to attract higher-profile creative partnerships.

    Alex Montalvo, co-founder and chief content officer of GammaTime, said platforms are expanding into genres such as thrillers and true crime while collaborating with established creators and adapting premium intellectual property. “This really is just the beginning of what is possible in this medium,” he said.

    As competition intensifies globally, executives said the next phase of growth will depend on balancing aggressive user acquisition strategies with broader content ambitions.

    “Don’t shun the format, embrace it,” Montalvo said.

  • Lily Collins to Play Audrey Hepburn in Movie About Making of ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’

    Lily Collins to Play Audrey Hepburn in Movie About Making of ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’

    Lily Collins will play Audrey Hepburn in a new movie about the making of the classic film “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”

    Collins will also serve as a producer for the project, which is based on the Sam Wasson book “Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M.: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany’s and the Dawn of the Modern Woman.”

  • Warner Bros. Discovery Posts Best-Ever Streaming Numbers for Olympic Winter Games as European Viewers Surge

    Warner Bros. Discovery Posts Best-Ever Streaming Numbers for Olympic Winter Games as European Viewers Surge

    Warner Bros. Discovery reported record-breaking streaming performance for the Milano-Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games, with the company posting triple-digit growth across its HBO Max and Discovery+ platforms compared to the Beijing 2022 Games.

    The return of the Olympic Winter Games to Europe, combined with what the company described as a highly innovative streaming experience, drove significant growth in viewership and engagement across WBD’s services.

    Total hours viewed on its streaming services grew 103% versus Beijing 2022, with three times as many subscribers (234% growth) tuning in via HBO Max and Discovery+. The milestone came quickly – total subscribers streaming Milano-Cortina content surpassed the entirety of Beijing 2022’s streaming audience within just the first three days of full competition (Feb. 6-8).

    Social video views on Eurosport’s European accounts and TNT Sports’ U.K. and Ireland accounts exceeded 4 billion, representing a 580% jump versus Beijing 2022.

    “The success we witnessed in the opening days has translated into an outstanding Olympic Winter Games for Warner Bros. Discovery with substantial streaming viewership and engagement growth in addition to highly robust linear audiences,” said Andrew Georgiou, president and managing director of WBD Sports Europe.

    A feature of this cycle was Olympics Multiview, a new offering that allowed streaming subscribers to watch up to four events simultaneously on a single screen with their choice of audio commentary. Roughly a third of users – 32% – made use of the feature. Viewers could also set personalized watch lists, receive gold medal alerts, track live action via timeline markers, and select from up to 21 commentary languages.

    The platforms carried all 246 live sessions across the 19-day competition window, which peaked at 11 concurrent events and featured 116 medal contests with 2,900 athletes competing. Triple-digit streaming growth was recorded individually in France, Germany and Italy on HBO Max, as well as in the U.K. on Discovery+.

    “Watching the Olympic Games on HBO Max and Discovery+ clearly resonated with audiences in the U.K. and Europe with three times as many people choosing to stream the Games with us compared to Beijing 2022,” Georgiou said. “Viewers being able to curate their own Olympics, selecting from all 116 live events and using innovative features such as our one-screen Multiview, drove significant increases in time spent by fans watching on our streaming services.”

    Linear performance also held strong, with WBD’s Eurosport (Europe) and TNT Sports (U.K. and Ireland) channels posting a 3% increase in total viewers versus Beijing 2022 – a reversal of the broader decline in linear TV consumption seen over the same period. Total linear hours viewed climbed 51% versus the prior Winter Games. Country-level linear gains on Eurosport included France (+47% hours viewed), Germany (+50%) and Poland (+32%), while TNT Sports in the U.K. and Ireland climbed 60% in hours viewed.

    Georgiou added: “This Olympics has set an incredibly strong foundation as we look to Los Angeles 2028 and the Olympic Winter Games returning to Europe again for French Alps 2030.”

  • ‘Pachinko’ Stars Kim Minha, Noh Sang-hyun Reunite for Netflix Rom-Com ‘Messily Ever After’

    ‘Pachinko’ Stars Kim Minha, Noh Sang-hyun Reunite for Netflix Rom-Com ‘Messily Ever After’

    Netflix has kicked off production on “Messily Ever After” (working title), a new Korean romantic comedy film reuniting “Pachinko” stars Kim Minha and Noh Sang-hyun.

    The film follows Su-hyun and Hyun-tae, a couple whose decade-long relationship swings between deep affection and mutual exasperation. “Leaning into the emotional whiplash of a long-term relationship, ‘Messily Ever After’ explores what it really means to stay together after the honeymoon phase has long ended — capturing the messy mix of loyalty, irritation, desire, and doubt that comes with truly knowing someone. The film is expected to blend sharp, witty storytelling with a grounded look at modern relationships,” according to Netflix.

    Kim, known for her roles in “Pachinko,” “Typhoon Family” and “Way Back Love,” plays Su-hyun, a perfectionist curator who holds everything together professionally but finds herself unraveling when jealousy and love enter the picture. Noh Sang-hyun, also of “Pachinko” and “Love in the Big City,” plays Hyun-tae, a passionate installation artist who is unafraid to stand his ground. The casting reunites the two actors following their on-screen romance in “Pachinko,” this time as college sweethearts now a decade into their relationship.

    The film marks the feature directorial debut of Seo Jung-min. Production is handled by Bombaram Film — the studio behind the young adult romance “Love Untangled,” directed by Namkoong Sun, and the acclaimed drama “Kim Ji-young, Born 1982,” directed by Kim Do-yeong.

    “Messily Ever After” continues Netflix’s push to champion emerging filmmakers in Korean cinema, following titles including “Love Untangled,” “20th Century Girl” and “Lost in Starlight.”

    The title joins Netflix’s extensive Korean slate that was unveiled in January.

  • New ‘Assassin’s Creed’ Leadership Team Set at Ubisoft, Including ‘Black Flag,’ ‘Origins’ Alums

    New ‘Assassin’s Creed’ Leadership Team Set at Ubisoft, Including ‘Black Flag,’ ‘Origins’ Alums

    Ubisoft has set three executives as the new leaders of its iconic “Assassin’s Creed” video game franchise, including alums who oversaw work on beloved title “Assassin’s Creed IV: Black Flag.”

    Vantage Studios, the Ubisoft subsidiary that operates the “Assassin’s Creed,” “Rainbow Six Siege” and “Far Cry” franchises, has named Martin Schelling head of the “Assassin’s Creed” brand. With this new title, Schelling will be responsible for overall strategy and long-term vision of the brand. Most recently, Schelling served as Ubisoft’s chief production officer and oversaw development workflows across the company’s portfolio. Schelling previously had leadership roles on “Assassin’s Creed” titles including “Revelations,” “Black Flag,” “Origins” and “Valhalla.”

    Creative director on both “Assassin’s Creed Origins” and “Assassin’s Creed IV: Black Flag,” Jean Guesdon has been appointed head of content for the franchise. Guesdon will oversee the Ubisoft brand’s creative direction, support individual games and guide the future of “Assassin’s Creed” “while staying true to its core DNA.” A veteran designer at Ubisoft, Guesdon’s credits trace back to the original 2007 “Assassin’s Creed” game.

    François de Billy has been set as the brand’s head of production excellence, a title that Ubisoft’s Vantage Studios says is is meant to “strengthen production practices and execution across the brand.” François was production director on both “Assassin’s Creed: Valhalla” and “Assassin’s Creed: Origins.”

    The new trio will transition from their current roles over to the “Assassin’s Creed” leadership team in the coming weeks to work alongside Andrée-Anne Boisvert, producer for “Assassin’s Creed’s” cross-brand initiatives and head of technological excellence, and Lionel Hiller, vice president of brand and go-to-market strategy.

    These appointments come on the heels of great change across Ubisoft, which is in the process of dividing up all of its teams into five “creative houses,” one of them being Vantage Studios. This new model is being pioneered by Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot as part of the company’s latest restructuring of operations amid weak post-pandemic performance.

  • ‘KPop Demon Hunters,’ Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Frankenstein’ Joining Criterion Collection (EXCLUSIVE)

    ‘KPop Demon Hunters,’ Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Frankenstein’ Joining Criterion Collection (EXCLUSIVE)

    Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” and “KPop Demon Hunters” have been added to the Criterion Collection. The two Netflix releases are among the most acclaimed and most streamed films of 2025 and are in the thick of the Oscar race.

    “Frankenstein” was nominated for nine Academy Awards, including best picture and supporting actor for Jacob Elordi, who plays the creature. Del Toro has labored for decades to bring his sumptuous reimagining of Mary Shelley’s classic tale to the screen, mounting and then being forced to abandon the production at several points in his career. He finally gets his wish with a film that is visually bold, offering soaring sets and lush cinematography. Like so many del Toro films, the monster in this story is less savage and more sympathetic than the human characters. Oscar Isaac, Christoph Waltz and Mia Goth co-star in “Frankenstein.”

    “KPop Demon Hunters” was a viral smash when it was released on Netflix last summer, eventually becoming the most popular film ever on the streaming service. It is directed by Maggie Kang and Chris Appelhans and won the Golden Globe and Critics’ Choice Awards for best animated motion picture and song for “Golden.” The hit number was also the first K-Pop song ever to win a Grammy, and “KPop Demon Hunters” is nominated for best animated feature and original song at the upcoming Academy Awards.

    The Criterion Collection publishes classic and contemporary films from around the world in editions that offer the highest technical quality, as well as supplemental materials including interviews and behind-the-scenes looks. Previous Netflix films that are part of the collection include Alfonso Cuarón’s “Roma,” Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman”, Jane Campion’s “The Power of the Dog,” Noah Baumbach’s “Marriage Story” and “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio.” Criterion also recently announced that it was adding other awards season favorites from 2025, including Joachim Trier’s “Sentimental Value,” Jafar Panahi’s “It Was Just an Accident” and Kleber Mendonça Filho’s “The Secret Agent,” to its roster.